Wednesday, September 3, 2014

How to find number of prime numbers between two integers - Mathematics Stack Exchange

Let π(x)=#{pxp is prime} be the prime counting function. The Prime Number Theorem tells us that

π(x)xlogx.
(That is limxπ(x)x/logx=1.) So, roughly speaking, around a large x, the probability that an integer is a prime is 1/logx. Thus, naively, one may expect that the number of primes in an interval (x,y], for large x is about (yx)/logx, and in a heuristic formula,
π(y)π(x)(yx)logx=hlogx.()
Here h=yx is the length of the interval. This heuristic makes senses only for h which is much bigger than logx.

From the Prime Number Theorem () holds if hλx, where λ>0 is fixed. From Riemann Hypothesis () holds for hx1/2+ϵ for any fixed ϵ>0. (Because the RH gives the error term in the PNT.) There are unconditional results by Huxley and Heath-Brown showing () for h roughly being x7/12.

If h=logxloglogxloglogloglogxlogloglogx, then () fails for a sequence xn. To deal with `small' intervals Selberg worked with almost all x. Namely he considered () for all xR+S, where |S(0,x]|=o(x). In this sense () holds if h/log2x0 conditionally on RH and for h=x19/77+ϵ unconditionally.

There are also works on the case hλlogx. There the distribution of the number of primes on intervals of this size is Poission with parameter λ, conditionally on the Hardy-Littlewood prime tuple conjecture. I think this is due to Gallagher.


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